Schell's Executors v. Fauché

138 U.S. 562, 11 S. Ct. 376, 34 L. Ed. 1040, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2348
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 2, 1891
Docket690
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 138 U.S. 562 (Schell's Executors v. Fauché) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schell's Executors v. Fauché, 138 U.S. 562, 11 S. Ct. 376, 34 L. Ed. 1040, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2348 (1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

Apparently in consequence of the decision of this court in Cary v. Curtis, 3 How. 236, to the effect that under the act of March 3, 1839, an action for money had and received would not lie against a collector of customs for duties paid under protest, Congress on February 26, 1845, enacted (5 Stat. 727) that nothing contained in the act of 1839 should be construed to take away or impair the right of any person who may have paid duties under protest, to maintain an action at law against a collector to ascertain the legality of such payment ; “ nor shall any action be maintained against any collector, to recover the amount of duties so paid under protest, unless the said protest was made in writing, and signed by the claimant, at or before the payment of said duties, setting forth distinctly and specifically the grounds of objection to the payment thereof.” The questions presented by the record in this case turn upon the proper construction of this proviso, and upon the proper practice to be pursued in making and serving such protest.

1. Defendants objected to the receipt of Exhibit 5 and twenty-six other exhibits standing in like position, with the protests attached thereto. These exhibits were all entries of merchandise imported by plaintiffs in various ships, to which were appended -the usual consignee’s oath, and a specific protest duly signed by plaintiff’s firm was also attached to each one by a wafer. Objection was made to the admission of such documentó, upon the ground that it did not appear that such *565 protests had been served upon the collector as required by the act oí 1845; and second, that if so served, it did not appear that they had been served at or before the payment of the duty sought to be recovered, as required by the same act.

The act of 1845 requires, first, that the protest shall be in writing; second, that it shall be signed by the claimant; third, that it shall be made at or before the payment of the duties; and' fourth, that it shall set forth distinctly and specifically the grounds of objection to the payment of such duties. But so far as respects the manner, or the person- upon whom protest shall be served, the statute is silent, and we can only infer that from the nature of the proceedings it must be served upon" the collector or his subordinate officer, or the person whq receives the entry or the payment of the duties. In this silence of the statute, and in the absence of any treasury regulation upon the subject, it would probably be competent for the collector to receive such protest personally, or delegate his authority to one of his deputies. It is not at all singular that after the lapse of more than thirty years, it should be impossible to prove upon whom the service was made; but we are informed by the testimony of a custom of passing protests in with the entry, which seems to have prevailed for some time prior to the date of these transactions, and to have continued until the treasury regulations of 1851 were adopted. Now, as these protests were produced under subpoena at. the trial from the proper repository where they appeared to have been lying for a long time, it is not unreasonable to infer that the usual course was pursued and the protests served according to the custom of the office. With regard to the conduct of a public office the presumption is that everything is done properly'and according to the ordinary course of business, or, as expressed in the maxim, omnia proesumuntur rite esse acta. 1 Greenleaf Ev. sec. 38. The same presumption would justify us in inferring that the protest was made and served at its date, which, in the case of Exhibit 5, was January 30, 1858, and "before the payment of duties, which appears upon the face of the entries to have been made February 1, or two days after the protest Avas signed.

*566 2. Objection was also made to Exhibits 6, 11 and 13, upon the grounds we have already held to be insufficient, and upon the further ground that the protest consisted of two forms of protest, one printed on white, like exhibit No. 5, but unsigned, and the other on blue paper, the latter being pasted to the former and signed by the plaintiffs’ firm. The two papers thus pasted together and signed, as aforesaid, were attached to the entry by a wafer and, read together, made a protest agains.t. two exactions, viz.: first, an excessive duty upon the mousselines de laine; and second, the exaction of a duty upon two and .one-half or .three per cent commissions, when, as claimed, such goods were liable only to duty upon two per cent commission. This consolidated protest was dated “ New ■York, Eeb. 10th,” and addressed, immediately following the date, to “ Augustus Schell, Esq., Collector of Customs,” and signed at the bottom by Lachaise, Fauché & Co., the importers. Had it not been for the repetition of the word “ Sir ” at the beginning of. each section of the protest, and. the further fact that the protest was on two pieces of paper, there would be nothing to indicate that the plaintiffs did not intend in one communication to protest against the two exactions, viz.: the excessive duty on the mousselines d_e laine, and the duty on the commissions. While the protest is signed only at the end of the second piece of paper, no one would be misled into supposing that the signature, and the final clause applying the protest to all future similar- imports, were not intended to apply as well to the protest against the duty assessed upon the mousselines de laine, as upon the commissions. And it is evident from the protest books of the custom-house in New York, that the entire paper was understood by the official who recorded it, as a single protest against two illegal exactions. ' Authorities are plentiful to the effect that, papers attached together even by a pin are to be treated as a unit constituting one entire contract or memorandum. Thus in Tallman v. Franklin 14 N. Y. 584, it was held that, where an auctioneer jpinned a letter to him from the owner of certain real estate to be sold, which stated the terms of sale, on a page Qf his sales’ book, and then made the residue of the *567 entries requisite to constitute a memorandum of the contract of sale' on the same page of the book, and subscribed his name to it, the letter was to be taken as a part of the memorandum subscribed by the auctioneer, and was sufficient to take-it out' of the Statute of Frauds. To the same effect are Hutcheon v. Johnson, 33 Barb. 392, 395, where certain' papers which had been pasted together were construed as a single memorandum; Ginder v. Farnum, 10 Penn. St. 98, where the sheets of a will were fastened together by a stri ng and Martin v. Hamlin, 4 Strobhart Law, 188. If, however, the papers are not connected together in fact, they are not considered as connected in law, unless, at least, the paper signed refers in some way to the other, which may then be construed as forming a part of it. Hinde v. Whitehouse, 7 East, 558; Kenworthy v. Schofield, 2 B. & C. 945. The proper test is, whether a person reading these papers would be deceived or misled as" to the actual intention of the writer. "We think there can be but one answer to this, and we hold the objection was not well taken.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
138 U.S. 562, 11 S. Ct. 376, 34 L. Ed. 1040, 1891 U.S. LEXIS 2348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schells-executors-v-fauche-scotus-1891.